Decon7 Systems was established to commercialize technologically advanced decontamination and disinfection formulas developed by Sandia National Laboratories. Our D7 chemistry is an EPA-registered, proven broad-spectrum antimicrobial disinfectant that by nature is incredibly versatile with a host of vital applications. It is a hydrogen peroxide-based formulation that also contains surfactants (i.e., soap), mild solvents, inorganic salts, and water. D7’s formulation is made up of mild ingredients, which give it low toxicity and corrosion properties.
D7 kills the most common foodborne pathogens, including those found in biofilms, and it neutralizes toxins. For biological materials (e.g., bacteria, viruses, and fungi), the surfactants soften the cell walls of microorganisms, which allows the hydrogen peroxide to penetrate to the interior, ensuring high efficacy. For toxic chemicals, the surfactant ingredients help dissolve the unwanted chemical into the D7 formulation, where it is attacked and neutralized by the hydrogen peroxide.
D7 contains the following ingredients: surfactants, mild solvents, inorganic salts, a low concentration of hydrogen peroxide, a hydrogen peroxide activator, and water. For further information about D7, please check out Decon7.com
When the lockdown started in April 2020, they were wiping down the entire office with the stuff (peons were locked out of the office and still). Corp are idiots.
"Decon7 sold “D7 Part 1” and “D7 Part 2,” pesticides that are combined to disinfect hard nonporous surfaces, with misleading efficacy claims to kill all bacteria, viruses and fungi. The products also had false and misleading safety claims, which created the incorrect impression that the products were noncorrosive and nontoxic. The products’ formulations in fact could have caused skin burns and irreversible eye damage. The products’ labeling also claimed the products were used by various federal government agencies to clean up buildings following anthrax attacks, implying that the federal government recommends or endorses their use."
Possibly snake oil and marketing hype more than repeatable science?